Dinitrogen Reduction to Ammonium at Rhenium Utilizing Light and Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer

Abstract

The direct scission of the triple bond of dinitrogen (N2) by a metal complex is an alluring entry point into the transformation of N2 to ammonia (NH3) in molecular catalysis. Reported herein is a pincer-ligated rhenium system that reduces N2 to NH3 via a well-defined reaction sequence involving reductive formation of a bridging N2 complex, photolytic N2 splitting, and proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reduction of the metal-nitride bond. The new complex (PONOP)ReCl3 (PONOP = 2,6-bis(diisopropylphosphinito)pyridine) is reduced under N2 to afford the trans,trans-isomer of the bimetallic complex [(PONOP)ReCl2]2(μ-N2) as an isolable kinetic product that isomerizes sequentially upon heating into the trans,cis and cis,cis isomers. All isomers are inert to thermal N2 scission, and the trans,trans-isomer is also inert to photolytic N2 cleavage. In striking contrast, illumination of the trans,cis and cis,cis-isomers with blue light (405 nm) affords the octahedral nitride complex cis-(PONOP)Re(N)Cl2 in 47% spectroscopic yield and 11% quantum yield. The photon energy drives an N2 splitting reaction that is thermodynamically unfavorable under standard conditions, producing a nitrido complex that reacts with SmI2/H2O to produce a rhenium tetrahydride complex (38% yield) and furnish ammonia in 74% yield. © 2019 American Chemical Society.

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Keywords

Ammonia, Chlorine compounds, Electron transitions, Isomers, Metal complexes, Nitrides, Plants (botany), Reduction, Chlorine, Metal complex, Nitrogen, Proton, Rhenium, Bimetallic complexes, Kinetic product, Metal nitrides, Proton coupled electron transfers, Reaction sequences, Spectroscopic yield, Splitting reactions, Standard conditions, Absorption, Article, Blue light, Chemical bond, Cis isomer, Controlled study, Electron transport, Heating, Illumination, Isomerization, Kinetics, Photon, Photoreactivity, Proton nuclear magnetic resonance, Quantum yield, Reduction (chemistry), Thermodynamics, Trans isomer, X ray diffraction, Rhenium compounds

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